Story of the Game

Man of the Match: Kieran Read once again loomed large for the All Blacks. The No.8 was heavily involved throughout and can lay claim to two assists while eating up the metres with ball in hand and chalking up more than his fair share of tackles.

Key Moment: There was a quarter of the game left when New Zealand fullback Israel Dagg was sin-binned. Trailing 29-16, the Boks turned the screw but failed to unlock a committed New Zealand defence time and time again. That lack of cutting edge meant what little hope they did have soon faded.

Hero of the Game: All Blacks captain Richie McCaw was once again a sizeable thorn in the side of his opponents. He walked a fine line and was warned by ref Alain Rolland more than once but was still able to celebrate his 100th Test match victory - the first person to reach such a landmark.

Villain of the Game: Was Boks coach Heyneke Meyer wrong to persevere with Johan Goosen as his kicker? Either way his side have made just three of their last 11 penalty attempts. That level of return is simply not good enough on the Test stage.

Talking Point: The Boks had this game by the scruff of the neck and were forcing errors from the usually composed All Blacks only let them off the hook and the game get away from them. They are a young side but that does not excuse some of the kicking and defensive lapses.

Play of the Game: The Boks were in control and building up a significant head of steam when the All Blacks hit back with a superb counter-attack that lead to Sam Whitelock's try. The Boks were made to pay for not finding touch with some slick hands from the All Blacks putting Whitelock into space but he still had to show great strength to hold off Adriaan Strauss and Johan Goosen on his way to a game-changing score.

New Zealand wrapped up an unbeaten Rugby Championship campaign with a clinical 32-16 victory over South Africa in Johannesburg.

The All Blacks secured the title with victory over Argentina last weekend but there was no let up from Steve Hansen's charges against a Springboks side that was determined to deny them a clean sweep in the inaugural staging of the new-look battle for southern hemisphere supremacy.

A try from in-form winger Bryan Habana gave the hosts a deserved early lead but the resilient All Blacks bounced back with a try from lock Sam Whitelock that was followed by another for scrum-half Aaron Smith. The world champions still trailed 16-12 at half-time thanks to Elton Jantjies' first Test points but they wrestled back control of the contest with 20 unanswered points after the break with tries from midfield duo Ma'a Nonu and Conrad Smith hammering home the All Blacks' dominance.

In an impressive show of strength, the All Blacks were also able to weather the loss of fullback Israel Dagg to a second half yellow card as the Boks floundered with the result a sixth consecutive win in the competition and a record 100th Test victory for captain Richie McCaw.

Ahead of the game South Africa captain Jean de Villiers backed rookie fly-half Johan Goosen to handle the pressure, his predecessor Morne Steyn having had a terrible day with the boot when the two sides met in Dunedin three weeks ago. But Goosen did not get off to the best of starts, missing two early penalties, the second rebounding off a post.

But the Springboks got the opening try of the match in the 12th minute as Habana took a pass from De Villiers to run in unchallenged after a loose ball in midfield proved elusive for All Blacks. Goosen this time made no mistake with his kick as the hosts led 7-0.

The fly-half appeared to be finding his range and knocked over a penalty before the All Blacks got on the board in the 25th minute thanks to a superb counter attack. The Boks missed touch with a clearance and their rivals immediately capitalised by moving the ball out to the left where No.8 Kieran Read put Whitelock away and powerful second row was able to ride tackles from Adriaan Strauss and Goosen on his way to the line.

Carter missed the conversion, but the visitors soon had their second try, Habana missing an interception attempt and Hosea Gear streaking clear before offloading to Aaron Smith, who scored under the posts.

Carter's conversion put the All Blacks 12-10 in front but Jantjies, on for an injured Goosen, knocked over a penalty to put the hosts back in front by one and did it again on the stroke of half-time.

The second half was all New Zealand, though, and they started it as they meant to go on, Nonu touching down after the All Blacks attacked straight after the restart and Carter adding the extras. Jantjies missed two quick-fire penalties as the Boks' kicking problems mounted, and their opponents took advantage with a fourth try in the 52nd minute.

Conrad Smith ghosted through a gap to touch down, with Carter's conversion making it 26-16 to the All Blacks. Carter extended his side's lead with a drop-goal in the 63rd minute.

The hosts were thrown a lifeline when Dagg was sin-binned for slowing down the ball, but the one-way traffic toward the South Africa line continued.

A Carter penalty with nine minutes to go took his tally to 11 and the New Zealand lead to 16, and Aaron Cruden even had time to miss a late three-pointer as the visitors closed out a convincing win.